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Most rings worn daily are subjected to lots of dirt, moisture and general abuse. What keeps your "tiny tunnel" free from moisture and presumable decay of the contents? Wouldn't hermetic sealing and guaranteed incorruptibility of any DNA properties inherent in the hair strands be important to the wearers of such rings? |
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Yes, a bun from me also. Might I subsitute the hair with blood and then seal it? |
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You could put some of the ashes of a passed loved one in the ring. |
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That's a neat one, and loads less creepy than those braided hair chain thingy's. We found one in my grandma's possesions and even though it was really well preserved, it still felt icky to touch it (The idea, not the actuality). |
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Why just hair? Why not blood? Or stem cells? |
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Assuming a gold ring, just make a small recessed spot of 24k
gold that includes the port. Once the hair is in place the
user could manually push that gold inward to seal it. (High
purity annealed gold will deform under a fingernail). |
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[Chefboyrbored], here is a classy variation to that theme ... {link} |
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[+], love the idea [xenzag]. I have a few .308 casings discharged in combat and a few chunks of copper from discharged enemy EFPs that I pryed out of the hull of our truck. I plan to melt it all down and fashion a ring out of this material. |
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